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Iliss Ntmazirte
This comes from the aforementioned stash of Moroccan tapes I recently received. Purposeful, driving and (at times) stark. For lovers of all things violin, vocals and verve.
This comes from the aforementioned stash of Moroccan tapes I recently received. Purposeful, driving and (at times) stark. For lovers of all things violin, vocals and verve.
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10 Comments
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i’m diggin it
this is great
AWESOME!
Just discovered your website. In a word: Awesome. Here’s a tip though, since you’ve included some arabic/lebanese singers, try to find tapes from Kuwait in the 70’s–amazing hairdos, sideburns you have to see to believe, and acoustic music values that puts MTV’s Unplugged to shame.
This music is berber not arabic.
It comes from the central part of morocco (middle atlas moutains). The tribes that use this type of melodies (which sounds like an oriental scale) are called “Zayane”.
I would advise you to listen as well as berber music from Agadir region. Their music is very different and they use a pentatonic scale (like almost all african)
so again, the cover turns out to be misleading.
never commented before, but i love this site. thank you for your dedication.
Thank you Awesome Tape People from Awesome Somewhere FunLoving. The Music you share is Sunshine in our house!
Cool blog you got here. It would be great to read more about this theme. The only thing it would also be great to see here is some pictures of any devices.
David Karver
Phone jammer
I don;t know if this tape was ripped with your new set up, but there’s a low-cycle hum going on throughout. It would be a pity if it was a problem on a bunch more postings. Cool tape though.
This is my absolute favorite blog EVAH